Ms. Decter, on the early learning and child care side, low-income families, given the cost of child care, really can't afford to go out to work in a lot of cases. There is the economic cost of people not being able to go to work because they have to stay home to take care of children, but there is also the benefit of kids getting a really good start. The Mustard and McCain studies have been around for a long time, but they are compelling in that a dollar invested in a kid in a high-risk situation provides $7 of benefit by the time the kid is 30 years old—or something to that effect.
Why aren't we focusing more on the economic benefits of early learning and child care and childhood development and broadening the community of support, based on that economic benefit?